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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
*Kristen Hutchinson (KH):* What brought you to tell this story? *Fawzia Mirza (FM):* Well, it has its roots in a short film that I made that world premiered in 2012...
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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
*KH:* How does your film embrace lesboqueer joy, instead of the typical “bury your gays” trope that we so often see in film and TV? *FM:* Well, I think for...
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THE QUEEN OF MY DREAMS: An Interview with Fawzia Mirza
So it was a remarkable experience across the board, working with these incredible actors, Amrit Kaur [Azra, the protagonist] and Hamza Haq [Hassan, her father] and Nimra Bucha [Mariam, her mother],...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
This scene welcomes you to the Afro-Canadian (food) stock exchange, an informal market where Afro-Canadians feed their hunger for their sizzling (African) “home cooking”. Scenes such as these have...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
I found this rather weird. Wasn’t Canada supposed to be more racially inclusive than the United States? Why then did the Americans have more Black TV sitcoms on...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
But I knew I could do far more for my people (I’m originally from Nigeria, West Africa) if I could weave the Afro-Canadian stories I heard around me...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
The sitcom’s pilot isn’t only about fun and laughter. It explores a number of conflicts including the difficult world of gender-identity disputes in Afro-Canadian families. Obi and Adjoa are...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
The pilot delicately handles the scene where Uzo-Amani’s progressively, according to their family, “bizarre”, dress sense is finally explained in a heated confrontation with her parents. She reveals her...
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The SMELL DA COFFEE TV Sitcom Pilot: How Black? How Funny?
These markers critically help to provide a sense of inclusion to those of us whose cultures are featured in the pilot, as well as indicate that other Afro-Canadian traditions...
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The Black Diaspora in Conversation: From Ousmane Sembène to Marilyn Cooke
The film’s protagonist, Keity Richardson (Schelby Jean Baptiste) is forced to intern at the morgue when she cannot find a vacancy in her preferred field of surgery shortly after...